MSK_Chess
enthusiastic learner
Who's Nurse Ratchet? Just kidding, but that did date you a bit.![]()
Mildred!

Who's Nurse Ratchet? Just kidding, but that did date you a bit.![]()
Who's Nurse Ratchet? Just kidding, but that did date you a bit.![]()
That's like not knowing who Hamlet was. Anyone not knowing about Ken Keysey, the Merry Prankskers, or "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test" may want to set aside some of their reading time to learn more.
That's like not knowing who Hamlet was. Anyone not knowing about Ken Keysey, the Merry Prankskers, or "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test" may want to set aside some of their reading time to learn more.
Kesey lived where I live and I worked with him several times. Also used to see Further driving around. His family is still here.
Where are you guys/gals purchasing your Brewtan B? I just online searched the three LHBS's that are within 45 minutes of me, and came up with zilch.
Fair enough. But they're aiming for commercial success and I brew for myself. If I'm going to brew a German lager I expect it to be clean, so I'm going to use W-34/70 and ferment it cold. If I want an estery Vienna "lager" I'll just use a kolsch yeast.
What I think I learned from that brulosophy experiment is that you can ferment W-34/70 warm and make good beer. What I don't understand is which beer more accurately represents what a German-style lager SHOULD be, which IMHO is low-ester and clean.
Just remember one thing with all this ongoing discussion: we don't know who the people are who are taking the triangle test, and we don't know what they've been eating and drinking prior to the test.
Both of those issues seriously call into question the validity of the results. No amount of statistical handwaving can overcome a lack of good data to begin with.
If people have been drinking IPAs prior to testing a lighter more nuanced beer, can they do that? If this wasn't an issue, then why do people suggest, when sampling a flight of beers, that drinkers move from the lightest to the heaviest beers?
Of course it's an issue, and it's the biggest flaw in how the brulosophy experiments are done. We don't know the population to whom the sample generalizes, and we don't know how or even if they were prepared for the test (clean palates, etc.).
Not that I expect it to convince you or anyone else of the validity of our experiments, but I generally collect data in my garage between around 11am and 2pm. Most people bring beer with them that we store in my fridge until after data is collected. When we take samples to meetings and such, we try to catch tasters before things get going just to ensure their palates aren’t obliterated.
But hey, if you don’t buy it, try it! It’s pretty easy.
Are you presuming both beers in our lager ferm temp xBmts were estery? Ive been drinking lager for over a decade, judging for nearly 5 years, and I havent detected esters in any of my warm fermented lagers with 34/70.
Denny you look like you may have been to a dead show or 10 :rockin::fro:
Are you presuming both beers in our lager ferm temp xBmts were estery? Ive been drinking lager for over a decade, judging for nearly 5 years, and I havent detected esters in any of my warm fermented lagers with 34/70.
I really like Bruosophers tests.
He does a lot of tests of practices that people question....whats the problem with that.
If anyone else wants to go through the time and trouble and can do it better than have at it and post your results....otherwise....quit your bitchin
I never said anything was perfect. I'm sure Brulosopher would agree. I like the fact that he puts in the effort testing questionable practices. Like I said if it can be improved and you know a better way then have at. Spend the time and effort for OUR benefit and post your results...otherwise....I can appreciate that. The "bitchin'" as you describe it comes from those of us with research and measurement backgrounds who see areas the work could be improved.
Why? It has to do with whether we're getting "actionable intelligence" or not. If--if--there are serious methodological or measurement flaws, then that's called into question.
That's all it is. If you want to believe the Brulosophy approach is perfect and you can unconditionally trust the results, that's your right.
I really like Bruosophers tests.
He does a lot of tests of practices that people question....whats the problem with that.
If anyone else wants to go through the time and trouble and can do it better than have at it and post your results....otherwise....quit your bitchin
I can appreciate that. The "bitchin'" as you describe it comes from those of us with research and measurement backgrounds who see areas the work could be improved.
Why? It has to do with whether we're getting "actionable intelligence" or not. If--if--there are serious methodological or measurement flaws, then that's called into question.
That's all it is. If you want to believe the Brulosophy approach is perfect and you can unconditionally trust the results, that's your right.
The problem is the tests are useless. They make lazy assumptions, there's no justifications or reasoning for any of their experimental designs, they have multiple variables they don't control for and there's no actual data collected. They hide behind the taste testing because it allows them to provide "scientific" results without any actual results.
They're the kardashians of science, all show and no substance. A picture of a thermometer and scientific jargon they don't understand themselves doesn't validate the results. Maybe some people see that and think "wow they went through a lot and everything is measured so carefully" but there's really no scientific thought process in any of it, and it's presented with a certain air of snake oil salesmanship. Just read his response below, someone questions ester production his answer is "I've been drinking lager for 10 years and I cant taster esters" That's a salesman answer, not a scientific answer.
The problem is the tests are useless. They make lazy assumptions, there's no justifications or reasoning for any of their experimental designs, they have multiple variables they don't control for and there's no actual data collected. They hide behind the taste testing because it allows them to provide "scientific" results without any actual results.
They're the kardashians of science, all show and no substance. A picture of a thermometer and scientific jargon they don't understand themselves doesn't validate the results. Maybe some people see that and think "wow they went through a lot and everything is measured so carefully" but there's really no scientific thought process in any of it, and it's presented with a certain air of snake oil salesmanship. Just read his response below, someone questions ester production his answer is "I've been drinking lager for 10 years and I cant taster esters" That's a salesman answer, not a scientific answer.
The problem is the tests are useless. They make lazy assumptions, there's no justifications or reasoning for any of their experimental designs, they have multiple variables they don't control for and there's no actual data collected. They hide behind the taste testing because it allows them to provide "scientific" results without any actual results.
They're the kardashians of science, all show and no substance. A picture of a thermometer and scientific jargon they don't understand themselves doesn't validate the results. Maybe some people see that and think "wow they went through a lot and everything is measured so carefully" but there's really no scientific thought process in any of it, and it's presented with a certain air of snake oil salesmanship. Just read his response below, someone questions ester production his answer is "I've been drinking lager for 10 years and I cant taster esters" That's a salesman answer, not a scientific answer.
The problem is the tests are useless. They make lazy assumptions, there's no justifications or reasoning for any of their experimental designs, they have multiple variables they don't control for and there's no actual data collected. They hide behind the taste testing because it allows them to provide "scientific" results without any actual results.
They're the kardashians of science, all show and no substance. A picture of a thermometer and scientific jargon they don't understand themselves doesn't validate the results. Maybe some people see that and think "wow they went through a lot and everything is measured so carefully" but there's really no scientific thought process in any of it, and it's presented with a certain air of snake oil salesmanship. Just read his response below, someone questions ester production his answer is "I've been drinking lager for 10 years and I cant taster esters" That's a salesman answer, not a scientific answer.
Why not either just accept it for what it is or ignore it completely? You're asking for it to be the way you want it to be and neither Brulosophy or Experimental Brewing is interested in doing things that way.
Gee, there are thousands of people out there who don't feel the tests are useless. If you do, all you have to do is ignore them.
This pretty sums up one camp of people here. I find it kinda sad really.
I like that the guys at that site are doing ANYTHING other than anecdotal conjecture, which ironically is what built this forum. Sure, it's not peer reviewed and unassailable studies, but it's better than nothing. If you choose to treat everything from there as fact, that's up to you. I don't, but I use it as another datapoint in my efforts to make better beer. Probably a better datapoint than the usual "this stuff is awesome make some" type of evidence we usually have.
Also for the record, I am a professional and I do consider Brulopshy B.S.![]()
17 times, but I was paid to be there every time but once. I actually can't stand the music. Makes me an anomaly where I live!
Also, not all pro brewers are god's gift to beer, there are quite a few homebrewers that I bet would brew circles around some so called "pros"
Cool, very cool. Bet you have seen some other amazing people. Curious what you did/do.